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On Sat, 24 Nov 2007 23:37:52 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote: On Sun, 25 Nov 2007 10:23:55 +0700, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: Have there been any studies made of shutting down one engine? I know that Beebe published some RPM/Miles/fuel consumption charts but those were for a single screw drive. I don't know if I'd call it a study, but based on my own statistics there is a definite save, even with the drag of a freewheeling prop. My situation may be different than some however since the engines are oversized for 95% of my typical usage. As a result, running both engines slowly is not only bad for them, but they would be operating just above idle speed which is not an efficient operating point. By running on a single engine, it is operating closer to it's design point which is not only more efficient but minimizes potential maintenance issues like carbonized valves, rings and exhaust manifold. My statistics for RPM vs fuel burn vs horsepower vs speed agree fairly closely with Beebe's numbers. Of course there is a fudge factor in his equation which is different for every hull shape. It turns out that the Grand Banks hull form is at the low end of the efficiency scale. I think that your case is where the "don't run the engines at low load" came from. If you have a couple of them great big motors in case you want to go fact and you end up running them at 1.000 RPM for days at a time I suspect that they will carbon up pretty good as I'm not sure how well the pumps are calibrated for speeds just above idle. During the first oil crunch I was working at a power plant in N. Thailand and the word came down from the Air Force to run the generators at 90-95% of rated power as they said that was the most efficient power setting. Bruce-in-Bangkok (Note:remove underscores from address for reply) |
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